Pest Tortricids

Many tortricids are important agricultural pests and the family contains a large number of pest
species. Zhang (1994) lists 687 tortricids as economically important, a number third
only to the highly diverse Noctuidae, with 1034 pest species, and Pyralidae (+ Crambidae)
with 748 recognized pest species. The economic importance of the family is demonstrated
by the amount of publications dedicated to the biology, physiology, identification,
and control of tortricid moths, and entire volumes have been published on these subjects
(e.g., van der Geest and Evenhuis 1991). Perhaps there is no better example of a ubiquitous
tortricid pest than the "worm" that is found after biting into an apple, which is actually
the larva of the codling moth, Cydia pomonella (L.).

This page contains links to other websites dedicated to tortricid pests.

TortAI: Tortricids of Agricultural Importance

by Todd M. Gilligan and Marc E. Epstein

Released in 2012, Tortricids of Agricultural Importance (TortAI) is designed to aid in the
identification of tortricid adults encountered during domestic surveys and tortricid larvae
encountered during quarantine inspections at U.S. ports of entry. This resource includes interactive
identification keys, detailed fact sheets, an illustrated glossary, information on dissecting and
preparing specimens, identification thumbnail galleries, and a database of DNA barcode sequences.
The interactive identification keys run as a Lucid3 Java Applet. TortAI can be accessed at the following
URL:

Released in 2009, LBAM ID is designed to aid in the identification of adult or larval Lepidoptera encountered
during LBAM surveys in California. This resource includes interactive identification keys, images, diagrams,
fact sheets, and a DNA sequence database. LBAM ID was created through a federal-state collaboration among
USDA/APHIS/PPQ/CPHST, California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA), and Colorado State University (CSU).
LBAM ID was developed and released in Lucid version 3.4 software and uploaded to the Internet to support easy access
by PPQ, CDFA and other cooperators. LBAM ID can be accessed at the following URL: